WBIE-Montreal

Latest

  • Batman: Arkham Origins' Deathstroke pre-order punches out a trailer

    by 
    Alexander Sliwinski
    Alexander Sliwinski
    09.25.2013

    Pre-order purchases of October's Batman: Arkham Origins will receive the Deathstroke challenge pack as a bonus on all current-gen consoles and PC. The pack includes the assassin Deathstroke as a playable character, along with the "100-to-1" beat-em-all-up mode, two challenge maps and three Deathstroke wardrobe choices.

  • Warner Bros. Montreal focusing on lower-budget social, mobile games

    by 
    Alexander Sliwinski
    Alexander Sliwinski
    11.10.2010

    Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment's new Montreal studio won't be working on triple-A console games, but will instead focus on smaller social and mobile titles, with a budget under $10 million per project. Speaking to LaPresseAffaires (Google translation), Montreal studio head Martin Carrier said that WBI-oui originally considered online games to be a secondary market, before the company realized the niche was "growing." Hmmm ... we wonder where execs got that idea? Reportedly, some employees and recruits haven't been so peachy keen on the studio's en vogue direction. Of course, in Montreal, there are still actual places where game devs can work on big-budget games. See: Ubisoft, EA and most-recently THQ.

  • Report: Warner Bros. Interactive opening Montreal studio

    by 
    Alexander Sliwinski
    Alexander Sliwinski
    03.22.2010

    Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment is the latest company to take advantage of Canada's talent (and yummy, yummy tax incentives) for game developers and publishers. GameFocus reports that WBIE (WBI-oui?) will open a new studio in Montreal that will be lead by division president Martin Tremblay and employ over 300 people. The studio will be known as WB Games Montreal. We've contacted WBIE for comment on the new studio, but the publisher has yet to make a formal announcement. In a previous professional life, Tremblay was the big fromage at Vivendi and Ubisoft Montreal. The executive also apparently claimed that the publisher would open a studio in another city soon. That could be a new studio, or it could be a developer WB has invested in, like Turbine -- or a solid developer that's recently tripped into some eye-catching success. Update: The province of Quebec has made it official.